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UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. 



I MPORTANT 



SUGGESTIONS AND FACTS 



FOR 



Christian Professors! 



AN ADDRESS ON TEMPERANCE 



By WILLIAM BAXTER. 




Central Book and Tract Committee of Friends, 
Richmond, Indiana. k 



■ 33 



FRIENDS' PUBLISHING HOUSE PRESS, 
New Vienna, Ohio. 



Important Suggestions and Facts 



Christian Professors, 



We are met together this afternoon in the interests of the 
Church. The cause of Temperance is one of the most import- 
ant outposts of Zion. In the progress of the Church militant 
there are hindrances to be removed. This work has to be done 
thro' the instrumentality of the servants of the Lord. Among 
the many obstacles to the progress of the gospel, the use of and 
traffic in strong drink are the most formidable. So great a 
barrier does it present to the moral and spiritual progress of 
mankind, that some of the most learned among the Jewish 
rabbis earnestly contend that the serpent which deceived our 
first parents was the "serpent of the still." And really there 
would seem to be some force in this position when we remember 
that the use of strong drink is the greatest source of vice, sen- 
suality, and sin. An eastern fable forcibly illustrates this point. 
It was enjoined upon a certain person that he should commit one 
of three crimes. He should himself choose whether it should 
be getting drunk, stealing, or committing murder. He decided 
to get drunk, thinking that was the least of the three crimes ; 
but, alas, while drunk, he committed the other two. And thus 
it is that strong drink is made the father of crime. 

The use of and traffic in strong drink to-day are the greatest 
barriers to the progress of Christianity. The Church claims 
America for her own. But does Christ ? A rapid glance around 
us will find an answer to sadden the heart, not only of every 



4 • ADDRESS ON TEMPERANCE. 

Christian but of every patriot. Look in any direction we may, 
and we see very many who, having the form of godliness, deny 
the power. 

Our country, which, at this moment, should be a land of plenty, 
order, and virtue, is crowded with paupers, criminals, and an 
army of police to stand between the vicious and the virtuous. 
1SW I ask, Why is this ? Are there no churches erected, no 
schools open, no ministers to preach the gospel of Jesus Christ ? 
Every one knows that the answer must be — that there are 
all these, and many more agencies in operation. How is it, 
then, that in spite of our houses of worship and prayer, of our 
ministers and teachers, of our schools and most admirable system 
of education — in spite of all these ameliorating and elevating 
influences, such depravity exists ? 

I answer, principally because there is that enormous evil, the 
drink traffic, established among us, which casts its dread shadow 
over everything that is lovely and of good report. 

Where, I ask, do the great mass of our population, more 
especially in the larger cities, spend their Sabbath ? Certainly 
not in the houses of worship and prayer. They spend it in the 
drinking saloon, familiarizing themselves with vice and sensu- 
ality of the grossest character. 

Some time ago, some Christian young men, in a noted city of 
the East, watched ten saloons during the Sabbath. What was the 
result ? Just this : that in round numbers, into these ten saloons 
there went upward of ten thousand men, women, and children ! 
w, I leave you to say., whether that is not an explanation 
of the reason that so few of our population are found clothed 
and in their right minds sitting at the feet of Jesus? So long as 
the masses spend their Sabbaths in saloons, there is very little 
hope of the evangelization of the world. For as Mrs. Wight- 
men says in her " Haste to the Rescue" : "Until the besetting 
sins of drink and bad companions are given up, men will not at- 
tend any place of worship." — p. 119. Every experienced city 
missionary will tell you that drink and the saloon are the great 
preventives of people being brought under the influence of the 
gospel. 



ADDEESS ON TEMPERANCE. ' & 

Then there is another important point. There are those who 
go to the house of God and yet are not saved. Why ? I firmly 
believe that the grand neutralizer of the gospel is the habit of 
drinking alcoholic liquors. You ask for my reason. Many 
could be given, but time will only permit me to give one or 
two. A sailor said to an earnest laborer in the Lord's vineyard : 
"When I came to God's house at first, and began to see that 
things were wrong with me, I determined I would try to be a 
Christian. I prayed earnestly that God would make me his child, 
and help me to live as a Christian should. But I did not give up 
the drink, and I found that, somehow or other, drink and relig- 
ion did not agree. Then I thought I would try another tack. 
I gave up the drink, and directly after I found peace with God ; 
and I now find that abstinence and Christianity work well to- 
gether." A distinguished minister said to Prof. Miller, of Edin- 
boro : "I have never been other than an occasional moderate 
drinker, but I confess that I have often felt even that indulgence 
to indispose me for religious services. I now very clearly see my 
duty in this matter. Henceforth I am free from the drinking 
usages of society — an abstainer." 

This experience is strictly in accord with the position the 
apostle took when he set being "drunk with wine" over against 
being "filled with the Spirit." The one excludes the other. The 
two species of influence are antagonistic. As the tendency to- 
ward one increases, the tendency toward the other must decrease. 
No wonder that a certain church office-bearer remarked : " It is 
a rule with me never to engage in any religious duty after I have 
been drinking." This statement was made in answer to the in- 
quiry, whether he had engaged in family worship after returning 
home from a social gathering where wine was. one of the enter- 
tainments provided for the occasion. 

A certain minister spoke to a person who came" to him in; 
great distress about his soul's salvation. The minister remarked, 
"You have been brought up under Methodist influences,^haven't 
you V " Yes," he replied. " In early life my mother'took me 
to God's house. I have generally been there on the Sabbath, 
and" — looking at the minister with an expression that bespoke 



f> ADD] tz:i?ep.a>-ce. 

the reality of his words — ' ' hundreds of times have I trembled and 
as I have listened to sermons, and have resolved that I 
would be a child of it the first glass of wine I took when 

I got home swe~:: those resolutions away." 

This experience holds good of thousands and tens of thous 
who go to the he use of worship on the Sabbath. The gla- 
two of liquor after their return home washes away the impres- 
sion, by nau ::rizing and deadening their spiritual convictions — 
and, I fear, in many cases, leaves them further from God than 
they were before they heard the sermon that impressed them. 
The sacrilegious priest to whom Richard Baxter went when he 
was laboring under religious conviction folly understood this. 
Baxter asked him what he must do to remove the heavy load of 
guilt which was approaching him. The priest replied, 
"Drink beer and smoke tobacco!' 1 Yes. my friends, depend 
upon it, there is no more effectual way to deaden religious con- 
quench the work of the Spirit upon the heart of 
man than to drink beer and :: smoke ihewtoba: nally. 

Tie governor of Canterbury jail said in 1867: "The num- 
ber of prisoners who have been committed to prisons with w] 
I have been connected during the last fifl yes rs amount 
22, KM). Amoug them I have : m e in contact with ministers of 
the gospel — numbers of persons who were once members of 
churches, as also children of pious parents, but I never met with a 
prise' % tribal abstainer." What a significant fact is this 

for Christian ministers and professors of religion to ponder over ! 

These, then, are a few illustrations of what I mean by strong 
drink being a hindrance to the spread of the gospel here in our 
midst, where the land a nth churches and ministers. 

The use of and traffic in drink are ;.. gi saf hindrances to the 
spread of the gospel abroad. As I look out on the world, I 
ruber that our divine Master, in his great sacrifice, made 
full provision for all mankind. I remember also, that, hav- 
ing made provision for the salvation of all, he, with his last 
words, laid upon his Church the responsibility of sending the 
glad tidings to all lands and to all people. T;.rv were not to 
z an island un visited, nor a human being unwarned. They 



ADDRESS ON TEMPERANCE. • 7 

were to say of nobody, " He is too low down to be raised up," or 
" He is too filthy to be cleansed," or " He is too rebellious to be 
subdued." The command was clear and distinct: "Go ye into 
all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature." Have 
ive obeyed it f If you look over the world, you will see a few mis- 
sion-stations shining like fireflies at midnight, and a few islands 
bright with the smiles of God, but the rest lying in wickedness. 
I ask, WJiy is this f Is it that there is some political barrier 
which prevents us from reaching these countries ? We used to 
hear at missionary meetings the prayer that God would open 
the door to the heathen. We don't hear that prayer now, for 
the doors are thrown wide open. God has opened the doors 
more quickly than we have been prepared to enter them. 
Though ,more than eighteen hundred years have passed since the 
Redeemer made his great provision, and commanded us to carry 
the glad tidings to all; and though in all lands people are 
crying, " Men and brethren, what must we do to be saved?" how 
is it, that midnight darkness still rests ■ upon most of Jhe 
human family ? Is it that we do not distinctly perceive our 
duty ? Certainly not. Go to those who are best acquainted with 
these things, and ask them for an explanation. Their answer 
will be, that their efforts are frustrated by the " fire-water f> 
which has followed in the train of Europeans and Americans. 
It is a strange and startling fact, that where Christianity and 
civilization have made most progress, the vice of intemperance 
and kindred evils are also most prevalent. In many heathen 
lands drunkenness is unknown, and the inhabitants become ac- 
quainted with it only through their intercourse with Christendom 
and so-called Christian civilization. A Persian missionary in- 
forms us, that if a Mohammedan is seen drunk it is a common 
remark that he has become a Christian. A native of India, 
applying for a situation, was asked if he were a Christian. 
Having replied in the negative, he was further asked, Why not? 
He answered : " I see that Christians get drunk ; I know that 
Christians commit adultery ; I hear Christians swear, and I am 
not like that." It is therefore manifest, that great injury is in- 
flicted on the cause of missions to the heathen by the prejudice 



8 • • ADDRESS ON TEMPERANCE. 

thus raised in their minds against a religion, with the profession 
of which they see so much evil associated. 

But this is not all. The Christian being the more civilized, 
and, in many cases, the dominant race, the natives naturally 
imitate the example set before them, and learn to use strong 
drink. Archdeacon Jeffries declared, after thirty-one years 
experience in India, that "For one really converted Chris- 
tian as the fruit of missionary labor, the drinking practices 
of the English have made one thousand drunkards. This is a 
sad thought, but it is the solemn truth. If the English were 
driven out of India to-morrow, the chief trace of their having 
been there would be the number of drunkards left behind." 
An eminent representative of the Hindoo race recently re- 
marked at a meeting in London: "What was India thirty or 
forty years ago, and what is she to-day ? The wailings and the 
cries of widows and orphans at this moment, methinks, fill the 
w T hole horizon of India. The whole atmosphere of India seems 
to be rending with the cries of poor helpless widows and 
orphans, who, oftentimes, go the length of cursing the British 
Government for having introduced this great curse of drink 
among them." 

Thus it is that strong drink has neutralized the efforts of our 
Christian ministers abroad, and brought great discredit upon the 
name of our divine Lord and Master. Christians, through 
drink, have become a by-word and reproach among the heathen. 
The heathen do not, and it is not to be expected that they 
should, understand the distinction between those who are Chris- 
tians in name only, and those who are so in reality. They are 
all heathen, we are all Christians — as they judge ; and so, when 
the vices are carried abroad and paraded 'before them, they nat- 
urally associate them with our religion ; just as we associate their 
vices with their religion. 

What Christian-professing England has done to the far-off in- 
habitants of India, Christian-professing America is doing to the 
American Indian. 

It is, therefore, very evident that there is no visible enemy 
that comes up so boldly, attacks so successfully, and hinders so 



ADDRESS ON TEMPERANCE. 9 

unceasingly the* Church's work a? the use of and traffic in si 
drink. >At home we find it sadly weakening the Chinch's 
strength, stealing away her members, hardening many hearts, 
making the gospel of none effect, seducing the young, keeping 
thousauds beyond the reach of Christian influence, and creating 
a threatening ma-s of the most hardened heathenism and cor- 
ruption in the very midst of our brightest and most active 
Christianity. Abroad, in regions alike far remote from us and 
from each other, we find similar results. The missionary has to 
contend, not only against the natural foes of the gospel which 
he finds in possession of the heathen field, but against their pow- 
erful ally, strong drink, which professing Christians, actuated by 
the greed of gain, send forth also to the field of his labors. 

Have these facts no voice for Christian people, and for the 
Christian Church at large? How comes it that whenever we 
send the gospel to Africa, the South Seas, among the Indians, 
or elsewhere, strong drink and its attendant evils are likewise 
sent ? Until our oivn drinking customs and our own drink traffic are 
overcome and abandoned at home, they can not be abolished abroad 1 1 

This brings me to the second point of my purpose, viz : That 
it is the duty of the Christian Church to sweep away this arch enemy 
of God's righteousness. 

Do I hear some of my Christian friends saying, " O! that it 
were possible !"? My friends, the Church will never be able to 
cast mountains into the depths of the sea till she is strong in 
faith. ISTo ! The great Master said : " If ye have faith, ye shall 
say to this mountain, Be thou removed, and cast into the depths 
of the sea ; " and faith in regard to this evil must be as strong 
as that, or we never shall succeed. You ask me, then, "Can 
this mountain be removed?" I reply : The voice of the Lord 
saith, "Every valley shall be exalted, and every mountain and 
hill shall be made low, and the crooked shall be made straight, 
and the rough places plain." Some of you may not take part in 
this glorious work through unbelief, but if you don't touch this 
evil, somebody else will ; and if you don't enter upon your work 
in this time, the time of your visitation, then God will raise up 



10 ADDRESS ON TEMPERANCE. 

others who will be more worthy of him. You may delay his 
work, but you can not prevent it. " Every valley shall be ex- 
alted, and every mountain and hill shall be made low, and the 
crooked places shall be made straight, and the rough places plain." 
Here, then, is our grand foothold. God has decreed that these 
mountains of evil and sin shall perish. Now, I turn to the Chris- 
tian Church, and I call upon her to respond to the voice of her 
great Master, and give herself to the work that is put before her. 

First, let me say, unhesitatingly, that the Church can remove 
this mountain of which I am now specially speaking. Look at 
her merely on her human side, and you will perceive that she is 
the mightiest organization in existence. Let the Church decree 
that any evil in this land shall perish, and who can preserve it? 
Look at her power as a teacher; are not the children of our 
country in her hands? Is there a village or hamlet where her 
teaching is not heard ? Let her, then, denounce this great cause 
of evil, and her voice will be listened to, and obeyed ! 

Then look at the political power which she possesses. Is there 
an election in which the Christian Church can not turn the bal- 
ance ? We know there is not ! There is not a district in this 
broad land in which she can not decide who shall be the repre- 
sentatives. Let her, then, be loyal to her great Master, and 
she will speak to Congress and to the various State Legislatures 
in such terms that, before another decade passes, this accursed 
traffic will be doomed. " 

That is the human side of the Church ; but there is the 
divine side. Regarded simply as a human agency, she is mighty ; 
but with her divine character and commission, she is more than 
mighty — for " God is in the midst of her, and he shall help 
her." She has not only the ordinary power which men have, 
but she has omnipotence at her command. She can not only 
influence Congress and State Legislatures, but she can "move 
the arm that moves the world." Let her stand up in her strength, 
and she can not only wrestle with flesh and blood, but with 
principalities and powers ; and when she puts forth her strength 
her enemies must succumb. Let her, then, arise and decree the 
end of this evil, and in our own day that end shall come. 



ADDRESS ON TEMPERANCE. 11 

The Church must do this if she would hold her own. There 
is no neutrality in this warfare. If we are not assailing strong 
drink, it is assailing us. Look into the Church, and everywhere 
you will find "Rachel weeping for her children because they are 
not;" numbers who were in the front of the fight falling into 
the rear ; many who once occupied high places in the Church 
falling away through this terrible evil. 

We have seen men prominent in the Church, at whose feet 
many have' sat in bygone days, dragged down by strong drink, 
till, with blackened face, they have stood up in the drinking sa- 
loon, and there muttered out sermons amidst the laughter, and 
jeers, and mockery of those by whom they were surrounded. 
O, yes ! if the Church is not attacking the drink, the drink is 
attacking the Church. The Church must attack the drink if she 
would keep her own. The tide of evil is surging around us. It 
is sweeping away our friends and kin. The Church must, if she 
tvoidd please her Master. Selfish considerations are not to be en- 
tertained in this warfare. "Whatsoever ye do," that is the 
command, " whether ye eat or drink, do all to the glory of God." 
Our great business is to do his will. 

It sometimes seems to me that many people join the Church 
who have very erroneous notions as to what is meant by church 
fellowship. There are many who seem to think that the Church 
is a beautiful banqueting house, inta which they may enter, and 
Yvhere they may sit, and sing, and dream themselves away into 
everlasting bliss. This is a great mistake. The Church is an 
army — the army of the living God, and the moment a person hears 
the voice of the Holy Spirit saying, "Thy sins, which are many, 
are forgiven thee," he hears the sa*me voice saying, "Now de- 
stroy the works of the devil; try to make earth like heaven, 
and every man godlike." "Whatsoever thy hand findeth to 
do, do it with thy might," The soldier, remember, is bound to 
war against every enemy of the commonwealth. And so it is 
with the soldiers of Christ. I may not pick and choose. 

Some of my friends say : " O ! we can't assault that enemy ; 
we are very busy with ignorance or heathenism." All right! 
fight away with these ; but remember this, that when a man 



12 ADDRESS OX TEMPERANCE. 

enlists, he doesn't bargain that he will fight certain foes only. 
There is no understanding that he will not fight the French, the 
German, the English, or the Mexican. Imagine that war was 
declared with any of these nations, and a certain regiment were 
to say : " We didn't enlist to fight against that enemy ! " The 
is absurd ! The soldier enlists to fight against every enemy 
of his government. The soldier of the cross enlists in the same 
way. He is bound to fight against everything that injures man, 
or offends God. He must. The command has gone forth, and he 
will not be found faithful if he attempts to shirk his duty in assail- 
ing any and all the powers of darkness, as they present themselves. 

Some present may ask, How are we to proceed ? I answer : 
First, if you want to battle with intemperance, you must do it 
by your own personal total abstinence from the drink. Nothing 
short of this will do. You may preach from the pulpit, or 
speak from the platform, and you may form your organizations,, 
but if you don't abstain yourselves you never will succeed. 

A Christian minister and his curates in the town of Shrews- 
bury, England, failed to impress the masses with the gospel, de- 
spite the entire force of their ecclesiastical machinery. His 
wife takes up the cause of her blessed Master ; and, Bible in 
hand, goes down to the work — hating total abstinence, and with 
no love for abstainers. She soon finds, however, that abstinence 
on the part of the people is. essential to her success. Open to 
the teachings of experience, she impresses its practice upon 
them. A certain measure of good follows ; but soon it becomes 
apparent that her own example and companionship are required 
in this matter ; and, though going against her original convic- 
tions, generously she yields %o the demand. The good work 
then thrives apace. All prejudice and prepossession give way. 
Self-denial is rewarded by success ; and we find this noble woman 
— a convert to total abstinence through her own personal exper- 
ience of its working — at length expressing herself thus : "1 
could no more now be a Christian and not a total abstainer, than 1 
could be a Christian and a drunkard" Her converts, not only to 
sobriety but to Christianity, she counts by hundreds. And her 
husband thankfully acknowledges, in great singleness of heart, 



ADDRESS ON TEMPERANCE. 13 

" You have solved, a problem which I have been years trying to make 
out — hofr to get hold oftfo >/" tlio people" 

We may talk, and work, and legislate till doomsday; but un- 
less we pass a law upon our own lips, depend upon it the enemy 
will hold us in derision. What do the Scriptures tell us? " Ye 
are the light of the world." You can not ignore this. You 
are Christ's representatives to those who know you. You, 
my brothers or sisters, if you go into a house, or company, are 
Christ's representatives there. There are children at the table 
with you. ' They ask : " Is it right to drink? " and they look 
to you for the answer. Actions speak louder than words. You 
sometimes say you would not lift up your finger against the 
total abstinence movement, but it has been well said, that every 
time you take a glass of wine or beer you lift up five fingers. 
Your example will be in favor of drinking. Actions, I say 
again, speak louder than words. 

It does no good for me to denounce drink with my lips if I do 
not denounce it in my practice. My life will always be more 
influential than my words. 

There are not only the children to be preserved, but the fallen 
to be raised. Here, too, your example will be mighty for good 
or evil. Will you not avoid strong drink for the sake of those 
who are suffering? — who have been made, as it were, moral 
paralytics by the use of strong drink, and who can not fight the 
battle for themselves? We Christians are those to whom their 
eyes are turned for help. They say : "If he would only have 
water instead of wine ; if he would only stand by my side and 
help me, I would thank him here, and bless him hereafter." 
Will you not do it? Will you pass by on the other side, and 
leave them to perish ? O, surely not ! Love to God and suf- 
fering humanity forbids it. You will come to their aid, at least 
so far as your example is concerned ; and in that example these 
weak, heavily stricken ones will find a harbor of refuge. 

Personal abstinence is first, then, in the removal of this great 
stumbling block out of the way of the gospel. But what next? 
The entire prohibition of the liquor traffic by law ! Do what you 
will — form your juvenile temperance bands, establish your va- 



14 ADDRESS ON TEMPERANCE. 

rious temperance societies and orders, preach your sermons, em- 
ploy your most talented lecturers, circulate your temperance 
tracts by the million, but as long as we have a business licensed 
by law to produce drunkenness, vice, and crime in our midst, 
the evil will continue. You all remember that most interesting 
sketch in the " Pilgrim's Progress" of the Interpreter's house. 
Christian went into a room where a fire was burning, and there 
were men pouring water upon it. But it was of no use, for the 
fire still burned, in spite of the water poured upon it. Christian 
wondered, as well he might, at this singular phenomenon. At 
length, his guide led him round to the other side, and showed 
him somebody behind pouring oil upon the fire, which had more 
effect in feeding the flame than the water had in extinguishing 
it. That is a true description of the traffic in strong drink. 
We have the fire among us. Our children and our national 
welfare are being consumed by it. Some of us, for lo ! these 
many years, have been trying to extinguish it. We have used 
the pulpit, the press, and the platform, and yet this fire has 
burned the fiercer, and now we have gone behind and found 
150,000 persons licensed by law to perpetuate this gigantic curse 
in our midst. Shall we continue to tolerate this great iniquity ? 
Or will not the Christian Church rise in her might, and, as one 
grand unit, declare that thus far shalt thou come, but here shall 
thy waves of destruction and sin be stayed ? 

They tell us they are licensed by Government. We say no 
government has a right to license men to tempt and ruin our children 
temporally and spiritually. Don't prate to us about rights and 
vested interests. We have children at home. Who will protect 
them from these 150,000 saloonkeepers, the direct tendency of 
whose trade is to blight and curse them here and hereafter? In 
the name of the fathers and mothers of America we demand the 
prohibition of this accursed traffic. We must have it ! Christian 
people, will you help us ? If nothing else will arouse you to 
political action, with special reference to this great wrong, look 
at and think of your children. You may be strong, but they 
are weak. Look at the many victims around you who are pow- 
erless against this arch tempter and destroyer. If human sacra- 



ADDRESS ON TEMPERANCE. 15 

fices were rife m our beloved country ; if certain places were set 
aside as shambles, where victims by hundreds were laid on the 
gory altars of a cruel god, you would hate, would you not, with 
a perfect hatred, the bolted door and the grated window of that 
horrid place? You are not human, much less Christian, if your 
heart does not burn within you for the removal of the grog- 
shop, which has destroyed more lives than all the sacrificial 
altars of heathendom. Yes ! I say it deliberately, after carefully 
weighing my words, that the dramshops of our land are such 
slaughterhouses as displeasing to God, and as murderous to 
man. Hecatombs of human victims are yearly sacrificed there. 
Not offered in sacrifice to an idol, you say ? No ! It would be 
some palliation of the sin if they were. The blind heathen 
thought that thereby they did God service; but these modern 
murderers have not superstition as an excuse. TJiey do it for 
filthy lucre's sake. Men, our own flesh and blood, are lured, 
drugged, and burned to death in these dens, that other men may 
make money by the process. I have sometimes stood on the 
pavement, and looked in at the open door. I have seen almost 
naked, haggard parents, men and women, standing at the coun- 
ter. They stood there yesterday, and the day before. They 
are known as customers. 

It is also known that what they buy and drink there is eating 
out their body's life, and bringing wrath upon their souls ; is 
breaking the hearts of their parents, or casting children, diseased, 
ignorant, and profligate, upon society. Behind the counter the 
dealer stands, accredited and licensed by the laws of our land. 
He has stripped his coat, and is working in his shirt sleeves. 
He is dealing out the means and material of ruin to his brother 
man, and taking his money in. My friends, I can not be cool. 
My head burns and my heart throbs ! That man, stripped, and 
laboring, and perspiring there, appears to me Moloch's high 
priest slaughtering the sacrifices. I confess it — I never can pass 
the saloon with coolness. I hate — God is my witness — I hate 
the burnished counter, and glittering brass, and glaring light, 
and painted window — all the accessories of the crime — the gar- 
ments of the idol — I hate them, for they are spotted with the 



16 ADDRESS OX TEMPERANCE. 

>d of men. In compassion, alike for the seller and the buyer, 
for the publican and the drunkard, I plead that an arrest; 
be laid by the mighty hand of the nation upon this cruel, mur- 
derous, wicked, law-authorized traffic. 

Shall we Christians be anxious about the heathen afar off. and 
md nidio >ut the sufferers at home? Re 

idolatry, and lest if y :an ; but in God's na: 

the intemperance of America, and sweep it away. The licensed 
saloon is the great propagator of this evil. Shut the saloon by 
rly prohibit it, and the great fountain of iniquity will 
be dost 

or the proper 
sverj Christian voter resolve, deliberately and 
prayerfully, as in the presence of Almighty God, that he will 
jte at all coming elections for such men only as are 
known to be earnestly in fav liquor traffic, 

and from that moment it will be doomed. Christian voters did 
this in regard to si id thereby inaugurated a movement 

which shook that great wrong to its cent : the Chi: 

be equally faithful in regard to the accursed traffic in 

will ultimate plish, through the help of 

G d, one of the great, 1 revolu- 

.he world has ever exp 

Th , not till the grogshop is closed, 

ae o; y : : v :.; lesti : ye ' . lted, 

untain and hill be made low; and the cr 
be made straight, and the rough places plain ; and the glory 
vealed, and all flesh shall see it together : 
for the mouth of the Lord hath spoken : 



